50 (!(!Of cour8@ I 1lI reø@fI)iøg DIY l@a8e The Epicure heaved a sigh of relief. Just a matter of form, hut it's a great satisfaction to know that I'm launched on another year of pleasant living in a residential suite at my fav- orite Warwick at... ahem. . . rates still untouched by inflation."" Tower suites and residential apartments are now leasing at modest rentals for Fall occupancy adúidt 65 WEST 54 TH ST . NEW YORK Under the same owner-management as The Ritz Tower _ The Lombardy _ The Devon = :- .. . . -=- ,-- --- j?; -=r- _ _ = - - --'---== II " ':I;< - -" -? f';:' .1\.. _ =- ___ ,....,f,i " __ _ - .... x ' ..:. . '/ - \ '? æ F.dZ .. . .....:. !!l.::'$i r/1J _ -I - =- 1"- - -:-- _ -=- - II'; '. ::.:. j ::;:;:;::::: :::: ::\::..-. - - - - - - t!!, / '. ... ...7... ............ f..!. .. : << te.\. - -= , : J' J. j;: y::.l $ '$'$:;::::: ::,:'::: i I; j;P '. I.. .:.",. J/ " f :1;t : ; F(i"":':h... ", \ ;. I _ ,; ......:.Iii :::-:. .::::,:.:........ _ ..V4".. 't.. / !:', * i; lff ;:1:'%. .v. ';;;. :: , ;:, .. The floating pageant of the busy river is but one of the charms of ((Southgate". . . . that delightful river colony on fashionable Beek- man Hill. The apartments are lux- urious -the rents agreeably low. 2 to 5 ROOMS Some with Dropped Living Rooms Real W oodburning Fireplaces Dining Galleries or Alcoves STUDIOS. PENTHOUSES, TERRACES Renting Office at 414 E. 52nd St. éad5/d&52ndJIJ. -.::::;::::::::..:::::::7:: ::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::>:::::::::;:::::;::::::::a:::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::;:::::::::::::::::=::::;.:::::;:::::::::. Tee AND GR.eeN Pros in Plus-Fours-The Battle of Olympia Fields-Mr. Hines' Iron Game J OHNNY FARRELL'S descrip- tion of how he learned to play golf - by hitting balls, with an old mashie his brother had given him, in to empty tomato cans on a vacant lot-has always seemed to us particularly plausible. Certainly a golf- er who had picked up the game by more pretentious methods would have been less likely to develop the taste for its niceties that Farrell had acquired a few years later. Long before he became the Open champion in 1928, he was celebrated as the best-dressed golfer in the country. He had three closets full of plus-fours, a hundred pairs of shoes, a sweater for every suit, and a tie to match every sweater. ",,'Then he defeated Bobby Jones at Olympia Fields, it had, as a matter of fact, a noticeable effect upon the habits of his confreres. Before that, it had been assumed that the es- sentials of a costume for golf were a pair of old knickerbockers and spiked shoes. A good many pros still adhered to the Scotch theory that washing one's hands between rounds was a dangerous affec- tation, calculated to spoil their grip upon a club. Afterward, all this was changed. For a time, even assistant caddy masters seemed to feel ohliged by the circum- stances of their calling to wear buckskin shoes and tassels on their stockings. How things would have resulted if Johnny had gone on winning tourna- ments it is unnecessary to imagine. In- stead, he toured the country, exhibiting his sweaters and his swing for several months, at the end of which his shots had lost their polish. They never quite regained it. His influence declined gradually, except at Quaker Ridge, where one of the older members, taking advantage of age for a gesture even Farrell could not hope to copy, made a habit of playing clock golf with two caddies-one to carry his putter and the other to hold a yellow parasol above his head. ""Vhen Farrell turned up again at Milwaukee, playing Gene Sarazen in the semifinals of the P.G .A. last week, we suddenly realized how long it had been since he had even threatened to win an important tournament. H IS threat last week, of course, turned out to be no more than that, but at least it served to produce the most interesting match of the week and some of the best golf. Farrell really owed Sarazen a title. At Olympia Fields, they shared a room in the club- house, and after Farrell's first round-wIth J ones for a partner-Sarazen was sym- pathetic about Farrell's ac- count of the behavior of the gallery. In- terested only in what Jones was doing, the crowd had irritated Farrell and thrown him off his game by not waiting for him to hole out whenever Jones had sunk a putt. Sarazen advised him to ask J ones for permission to putt first on every green the next day. Farrell did it and cut three strokes off his score for a 74. ""Vhen Sarazen found that he was to be Jones' partner, for the next two rounds, he airily remarked to Farrell: "I'll lick him, and that will worry him." It is quite possihle that there will never be another thirty-six- hole match as exciting as that playoff at Chicago-in which, finally, Farrell got not only his share of the gallery's attention but the Cup, which he later aid he had felt sure of winning from the start. I t was this calm Gaelic con- viction that was missing in Farrell's game last week. He was hitting, with his easy, upright swing, as well as he did five years ago, hut Sarazen was five up at the thirty-second hole. T HE P.G.A. turned out to he a much hetter tournament than we expected. Sarazen, at least, should have been delighted that Hagen was having too much fun playing with the Prince of Wales and breaking course records in Scotland to come home. Young ""Villie Goggin played a good round in the finals but Sarazen was hitting his shots even better than the day before. Of the two unknowns who reached the semi- finals-and incidentally we were less surprised at their presence there than at the fact that the round of eight contain- ed six of the favorites-we liked Hines' game better. Goggin's length off the tee was handy on the dry course but Hines had a sounder iron game, we thought. His name is likely to turn up again. -R. L. T. . WILL SELL. Two new homes complete $5,000. Easy terms. J . Vernon Wants- house.-Westfield (N.Y.) Republican. Make up your mind, make up your mind.